The trigger was a December 1989 special, “A Year With Andy Rooney,” in which he said: “There was some recognition in 1989 of the fact that many of the ills which kill us are self-induced. In 1990, CBS News suspended him without pay in response to complaints that he had made remarks offensive to black and gay people. Rooney’s opinions sometimes landed him in trouble. Rooney “brought to the issue of youthful despair a mixture of sarcasm and contempt,” but it was “worth noting because in 1994 that sort of attitude is as dated and foolish as believing that cancer is contagious.” It was not surprising, she wrote, that Mr. Rooney’s dismissive comments after Kurt Cobain of the band Nirvana committed suicide in 1994. The New York Times columnist Anna Quindlen, for example, took strong issue with Mr. Rooney was decidedly not everyone’s cup of tea. Time magazine once called him “the most felicitous nonfiction writer in television.” But Mr. On the subject of higher education, he declared that most college catalogs “rank among the great works of fiction of all time,” and that a student of lackluster intellect who could raise tuition money would find it “almost impossible to flunk out.” He once concluded that “it is possible to be dumb and be a college president,” but he acknowledged that “most college students are not as smart as most college presidents.” He disliked New Year’s Eve, waiting in line for any reason and the bursars at whatever colleges his children attended. Patton and Ernest Hemingway, both of whom he had known personally, were gasbags. He observed that “there are more beauty parlors than there are beauties” and that “if dogs could talk, it would take a lot of the fun out of owning one.” “I don’t like any music I can’t hum,” he grumbled. He railed against “two-prong plugs in a three-prong society,” the incomprehensibility of road maps, wash-and-wear shirts “that you can wash but not wear,” the uselessness of keys and locks, and outsize cereal boxes that contained very little cereal. He also claimed to like shined shoes and properly pressed pants and had machines in his office to take care of those functions, although somehow he always managed to look rumpled.īut he was better known for the things he did not like. Eisenhower, one of the few politicians who won his approval because, as an Army general during World War II, he had refused to censor Stars and Stripes, the G.I. He admitted to loving football, Christmas, tennis, woodworking and Dwight D. With his jowls, bushy eyebrows, deeply circled eyes and advancing years, he seemed every inch the homespun philosopher as he addressed mostly mundane subjects with varying degrees of befuddlement, vexation and sometimes pleasure. Rooney.īut it was “A Few Minutes With Andy Rooney,” his weekly segment on “60 Minutes,” that made him one of the most popular broadcast figures in the country. Beginning in 1962, he had a six-year association with the CBS News correspondent Harry Reasoner, who narrated a series of Everyman “essays” written by Mr. Rooney entered television shortly after World War II, writing material for entertainers like Arthur Godfrey, Victor Borge, Herb Shriner, Sam Levenson and Garry Moore. Rooney had been hospitalized after developing “serious complications” from an unspecified operation. After that, said Jeff Fager, the chairman of CBS News and the program’s executive producer, he would “always have the ability to speak his mind on ‘60 Minutes’ when the urge hits him.”īut a little more than three weeks after that appearance, CBS announced that Mr. Rooney would be making his last regular weekly appearance on “60 Minutes” on Oct. In late September, CBS announced that Mr. Rooney died after complications following minor surgery. He was 92 and lived in Manhattan, though he kept a family vacation home in Rensselaerville, N.Y., and the first home he ever bought, in Rowayton, Conn.ĬBS News said in a statement that Mr. Andy Rooney, whose prickly wit was long a mainstay of CBS News and whose homespun commentary on “60 Minutes,” delivered every week from 1978 until 2011, made him a household name, died on Friday in New York City.
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